Prison Privatization Opponents Optimistic But Vigilant

With Governor John Lynch leaving office and a significant turnover in the membership of New Hampshire’s Executive Council, the danger that the state would turn over management of its prisons to a private firm has diminished. However, privatization foes remain vigilant until the proposal is not just really dead but really most sincerely dead.

The possibility of privatization was raised in a Request for Proposals (RFP) issued by the state a year ago. The RFP explicitly invited private firms to offer plans to build and operate a prison for women, a prison for men, or a “hybrid” facility for both men and women. Private firms were also invited to submit plans to build such facilities and lease them to the state, or renovate existing facilities for the same purpose. Four firms responded to the detailed RFP, reportedly with enough paper to fill a room in the State House Annex. None of the bids proposed to build or renovate a facility just for women, despite the fact that the existing women’s prison in Goffstown is badly over-crowded and inadequately designed.

[mantra-pullquote align=”left|center|right” textalign=”left|center|right” width=”33%”]”The consultants helping the State review the bids have deep ties to the private prison industry. CCA, GEO, and MTC also contracted with local lobbyists to help them make their cases.” [/mantra-pullquote]Corrections Corporation of America, the industry leader, revealed it would consider sites in Lancaster, Northumberland, and Hinsdale. Management and Training Corporation cast its sights on land on Hackett Hill Road in Manchester. The Hunt Group (now known as CGL) proposed to build on land already controlled by the state prison in Concord. The fourth, the GEO Group, did not reveal the location of its proposed facilities.

CCA, GEO, and MTC also contracted with local lobbyists to help them make their cases.

Due to the complexity of the request and the responses, the Departments of Administrative Services and Corrections determined they were not able to evaluate and compare the proposals by themselves. With a vote from the Executive Council, the State signed a $171,000 contract with MGT of America to help analyze the documents. MGT’s report was due October 5 and their contract was to expire October 31. Those dates have come and gone with no report yet. “It’s unlikely it’s going to be resolved this year,” Gov. Lynch said at the October 17 Executive Council breakfast.

While we wait for the consultants (who happen to have deep ties to the private prison industry) to complete their report, Gov. Lynch has not stopped talking up the possibility that the state would contract with a private firm to finance and build a prison, which it would then lease to the state. Lynch appears to be convinced that the men’s prison needs to be replaced and that the Legislature would never approve funding through the capital budget process. From his perspective, contracting out prison ownership is a way to get around the normal budgeting process. That there has been no public discussion of the need for a new men’s prison does not seem to factor into his position. Moreover, such a proposal would give a private firm a foot in the door to promise cost savings down the line if they were given full control.

The experience from other states shows clearly that privatization is not a path to cost savings. Despite anti-union policies and reduced expenses of wages, benefits, and training, private firms in other states have been unable to save money for the states. What they have accomplished is a pattern of increased violence within the walls leading to a less safe, less secure environment for prisoners and staff alike. This in turn has led to high levels of staff turnover, feeding less security. And it means prisoners — most of whom will return to the free world — will be less likely to get the support they need to live productive lives outside the prison walls.

Incoming Governor Maggie Hassan has been explicit that she has no interest in turning over the prison keys to private firms. Whether she agrees with her predecessor that the men’s prison needs to be replaced is not yet clear. What is clear is that the state does need to do something about the women’s prison, which is already the subject of a civil rights lawsuit the state is likely to lose.

What is also clear is that approaches to crime and corrections that emphasize alternatives to incarceration, provide counseling and education to those who need it, and that interrupt the school-to-prison pipeline can be more effective and save money for taxpayers. The most active anti-privatization groups — including the State Employees Association, the NH League of Women Voters, Citizens for Criminal Justice Reform, the NH Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, the NH Civil Liberties Union, and the American Friends Service Committee — are optimistic they can claim victory soon. They are already turning attention to development of a more humane approach to corrections, one that would preserve good jobs and save the state money.

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About Arnie Alpert

Arnie Alpert is New Hampshire Program Coordinator for the American Friends Service Committee (http://www.afsc.org/nh), a Quaker organization that supports social justice, human rights, and peaceful change. He is a member of UNITE HERE Local 66-L and blogs at http://inzanetimes.wordpress.com.

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